The Hill reports that Florida's Senate race is drawing Democratic interest, with Trump's approval stuck in the mid-30s and an unpopular U.S.-Iran war pushing gas prices above $4 per gallon — conditions that in past midterm cycles would mark the state as competitive.
The structural problem: Florida's electorate has shifted hard since 2018. Republicans have added roughly 800,000 net registered voters over Democrats since 2020, per Florida Division of Elections data, and Ron DeSantis carried the state by nearly 20 points in 2024. Economic pain is real, but registration math is load-bearing.
The play for Democrats isn't to pretend the map doesn't exist — it's to force Republicans to spend there. A credible recruit (the summary floats Alexander Vindman's name) raises the cost of holding Florida, potentially pulling NRSC money away from Arizona or Michigan. That's the actual strategic value here, whether or not the seat flips.